And I generally agree. Nowhere have I said that Discovery isn't a great show (I don't have any idea if it is), or that it isn't 'real' Star Trek (I generally hate any 'it isn't real' argument.) The closest I've come is in stating that it can't be in the timeline/universe they have said it is in.El Guapo wrote: ↑Mon Jun 06, 2022 11:59 am I'm kind of done with "this isn't real Star Trek / Star Wars" complaints. I get it at some level, in that there are certain core characteristics that most people associate with Trek and SW (and other fictional universes), and if you change things too much then it's gibberish. Like I at least get why my "Captain Picard enrolls at Hogwarts" script didn't get picked up, even if it would have been amazing.
But like, I feel like if there's any lesson to be learned from The Force Awakens essentially remaking A New Hope, followed by a TV show or movie for every minor character in the original trilogy (even if the Aunt Beru / Figrin D'an road trip movie is going to be incredible), it's that you're better off if the IP owners are willing to innovate than one where they're hyper-focused on not diverging from the first entry to make money. Even if sometimes you get complete turds like Picard season 2.
There has to be a balance between respecting what's been done and innovation. The problem is that Discovery - unlike TNG - isn't even attempting to achieve that balance. They simply brush aside anything that doesn't suit the direction they want to go, and it sets up a kind of extreme cognitive dissonance when I try to watch it. Writing, story, acting - none of that comes through because I just find everything else so... uncomfortable.
I really, really wish they'd either given them their own universe (like Abrams) or a different period of history (like TNG/etc) to play in rather than sticking it right in the middle of something that is well-established.